THE NEW YORKER back one of Shaw's celebrated postcards. He had used the address, he said, because he had known some people who had lived there. He mentioned a Mis,; Grme, a feminist, who had practiced there as an actuary and had smoked huge cigars, and he added that KarJ Marx's daugh- ter Eleanor had lived there with E d- ward A veling and that she bad "suicid- ed" there when she found out that he had married another woman on the death of his lawful wife. This was fascinating, but it was tan- talizingly incomplete, and I decided at once to find out al1 I could about Elea- nor. It struck me that it might have -been in my flat that she had lived and then killed herself. I began to people my rooms with ghosts-a brillIant group, including Shaw, Engels, \Villiam Mor- ris, Keir Hardie, John Burns, and the mysterious A veling, talking their heads off about everything from Ibsen to the law of diminishing returns, while Elea- nor, the most interesting but indistinct of all, moved among them pouring strong coffee. M y search started, as such searches must, in the Reading Room of the British Museum, and It pleased me to think, as I settled down to tracing the life of Marx's daughter: that perhaps I was sitting in the chair that Marx him- self had occupied for so many years whIle he labored over "Das Kapital." I soon found that most writers on Marx were far too preoccupied with the father to bother much about the daughter. The best I could find were scattered ref- erences to her in memoirs and a line or two in a biography, but before long I had established the fact that she was the true daughter of her father-a superb linguist, a political writer and agitator, and the translator of many books and plays. She translated Ibsen's "The Lady fr.om the Sea," "The Wild Duck," and "An Enemy of the People" from the Norwegian, and Flaubert's "Madame Bovary" from the French. Altogether she translated or edIted eleven books, and, in collaboratIon with Edward A veling, wrote four, including "The Woman Question" and "The Factory Hell." Most valuable of all, I had my first glImpse of Eleanor as a young woman. In the spring of 1883 (the year her fa- ther died), when she was twenty-eight, she met Beatrice Webb, and, after look- ing Eleanor over carefully, that elegant early Socialist noted in her diary that Eleanor was "comely dressed in a slov- enly picturesque way with curly black hair flying about in all directions." "Fine The world's finest sh. rry comes dressed in a sack '{ .J: . .;, . .... . . ,..'1 . .<. \. -, , I < ./ <<;::"\..... f .. ... ,w"' " #,;ø I """<- :: < . ,.. .,'t ... .,*. , , 1 -Är ":t ...............-" ""'C!"-.. :'DRy SAcK y ; " 'o/<^ " 1 :' ',' ' . . '.:.', :: ":'.' ,>>' A.; I '. :, ttl ..' , , <i'<' · {:} - Let this Seal be your guide to quality. I x.. ..... :--; .w v^ Z' <t." "'\;' . it's Dry Sack Sherry... perfectly balanced, neither too dry nor sweet, with a tich nutty flavor. You'll see Dry Sack everywhere in its distinctive cloth sack. " < ""'- .., j. )" . '*': - ' ! ::. Ä:." ' . .... , , , '<k ,:,(}: ... :.. J\( Æ ...þ '- " , (:.,. ;;, ...,.. ,....;' :=:'". .. "' '; :$.: ;z..:.,) :'. , . , , :'. " ' '''<' Þ ..0. * , lJ ..'", ,. ^... 00-.1' At lunch and cocktails, so many people choose Dry Sack. . . preferring it to heavy drinks For Dry Sack is light and agreeable, a classic Sherry imported from Spain. Serve on the rocks or the usual way. WILLIAMS AND HUMBERT .......... DRY SACK Q)Mt9mpotWl SHERRY IMPORTERS SINCE 1811 Julius Wile Sons & Co., Inc., New York 191 (:,